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Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAction film about Chinese resistance after Japanese invasion in 1930's.Action film about Chinese resistance after Japanese invasion in 1930's.Action film about Chinese resistance after Japanese invasion in 1930's.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Derek Tung-Sing Yee
- Wong
- (as Tung-Shing Yee)
Chindy Lau
- Chin-chin
- (as Cindy Lau)
Ku Feng
- Ming's Grandfather
- (as Feng Ku)
Fung Hak-On
- Japanese Thug
- (as Hark-On Fung)
Jeong-lee Hwang
- Collaborator
- (as Jang Lee Hwang)
Avis à la une
Michelle Yeoh is a daring adventurer, singlehandedly destroying a village of men who try to cheat her of twenty tael (although she uses a lot of footwork), and flying her yellow biplane around to win aerial combat against a Japanese fighter plane; this is during the Second World War. Her grandfather sends her on a mission to rescue Prince Youda of a city where the Japanese wish to set up a poison gas factory. She mistakes wanderer and con man Richard Ng for the agent she is supposed to meet, but soon settles out that it is actually Tung-Shing Yee. Meanwhile, Chindy Lau is in love with the timid Youda, played by Lowell Lo. When Lo refuses to order the deaths of the three leads, Miss Lau rouses the people of the city to revolt against the Japanese. This results in a big battle in which it looks like a company of mortar men and ninjas attack Fort Zinderneuf from THE LAST REMAKE OF BEAU GESTE.
Miss Yeoh is the star, but clearly the producers thought she was not strong enough to carry the movie by herself, so they got involved in a lot of elaboration which works very nicely. She still loks great running, and her martial arts are very good to watch, but Ng steals the show with his con man character, and the final battle is a lot of fun to watch. There's a lot of anti-Japanese sentiment, still de rigeur in Chinese movies, but with a hint that things can work out in the end. Lots of fun.
Miss Yeoh is the star, but clearly the producers thought she was not strong enough to carry the movie by herself, so they got involved in a lot of elaboration which works very nicely. She still loks great running, and her martial arts are very good to watch, but Ng steals the show with his con man character, and the final battle is a lot of fun to watch. There's a lot of anti-Japanese sentiment, still de rigeur in Chinese movies, but with a hint that things can work out in the end. Lots of fun.
"Magnificent Warriors" finds its leading star, Michelle Yeoh, in top form: her speed and dance-like grace make her fight scenes a pure pleasure to watch (she's also good with a whip....and a rope....and a spear....well, you get the idea). And as a bonus, there is another girl, the beautiful and feisty Cindy Lau, who fights as well! Richard Ng, perhaps better known for his role in the "Lucky Stars" films, provides the comic relief, and he's actually quite funny here. The action offers a good mix of martial arts and large-scale battle scenes, and the story is (after the first 30 minutes) engaging and at times even inspiring. The production is spectacular and the music score appropriately epic. If you want to see an Asian take (plus a female twist this time) on the Indiana Jones formula, this is a much better choice than Jet Li's "Dr. Wai And The Scripture With No Words". (***)
Michelle Yeoh kicks lots and lots of butt in a cool aviator jacket in this fun martial arts movie. Presumably its English title comes from the vaguely Seven Samurai/Magnificent Seven-esque plot about defending a Mongolian town (although by my count there are fewer than seven main heroes here). Towards the end, it increases in scale to become a full-blown war movie, but I think it's at its best in the smaller-scale fights.
Richard Ng plays a con man who gets caught up in events. He provides the broad comic relief, sometimes successfully (his introductory scene involves him getting into a fight and being cartoonishly kicked around like a football).
The filmmakers recorded one catchy musical fanfare to use in the action sequences, and by gum, they're going to get their money's worth from it if it's the last thing they do!
Richard Ng plays a con man who gets caught up in events. He provides the broad comic relief, sometimes successfully (his introductory scene involves him getting into a fight and being cartoonishly kicked around like a football).
The filmmakers recorded one catchy musical fanfare to use in the action sequences, and by gum, they're going to get their money's worth from it if it's the last thing they do!
'Magnificent Warriors (1987)' should, in theory, be an absolute blast. With almost wall-to-wall action that's as well-choreographed as you could hope, Michelle Yeoh in the leading role as an Indiana Jones homage, and a story that escalates from a small-scale weapons deal to a larger conflict concerning a city's resistance against the Japanese military, there's very little that outright doesn't work about the picture. However, I found it very difficult to remained engaged with it. I felt a disconnect between what I was seeing and what I was feeling, constantly aware that I should be really enjoying almost everything on screen but never quite being able to do so. Perhaps that's due to the fact that I was very tired when I watched it, or perhaps it's due to some underlying issue that's hard to pinpoint but has a distinct impact nevertheless. Either way, the result is an affair that's enjoyable yet not particularly compelling. It doesn't help that the flick has a somewhat odd pacing that makes its final third feel far longer than it actually is, slowing the relatively breezy feature down just enough that you're surprised when you instinctively check the clock and see there's still quite a lot left. The movie is well-made in most of the ways that really matter, and its star is as superb as ever as she kicks butt and takes names (and even uses a whip), but I don't enjoy it as much as I feel I ought to. It's strange to feel as though you don't like a particular movie because of your state of mind, as it calls into question any criticisms you have of the affair. However, if the feature was more engaging and - to a lesser yet still significant degree - exciting, it surely would have inspired me to sit up in my seat and pay more attention to it. It probably doesn't help that the audio was awful in the version I saw; whoever mixed it clearly wanted to avoid the common mistake of having people turning the sound up to hear the dialogue only for their ears to get blown out by the explosions and gunfire that follows it, but they clumsily compress each and every action-related sound effect so that they pop less than any of the speaking and it's just really weird to listen to. Ultimately, this is a decent - if fairly unremarkable - action flick with some flat-out fantastic set-pieces but an overarching sense that nothing is as impactful as it ought to be. Still, even at its least compelling, it's an entertaining experience that isn't likely to disappoint genre fans too much.
Watching fresh-faced Michelle Yeoh at age 24 kicking butt in her martial arts scenes and channeling Indiana Jones early on was a lot of fun. The role required a lot of physicality and she was more than up to the task. Unfortunately, the story is weak and the film is tonally all over the map, veering from lame humor to violent war scenes at the drop of a hat. It's a patriotic film about the defense of China from Japanese invasion which I respected, but it's too scattered and cartoonish, working better in its smaller fight scenes in the first half. Meanwhile, there are extraneous characters like Chin-chin and what seemed like a soundtrack consisting of a single song. Worth seeing for Michelle Yeoh, but messy.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAccording to Michelle Yeoh, the film was planned to be shot in 3 weeks but ended up taking 3 months. Source: Magnificent Warriors DVD: Archive Interview
- ConnexionsReferenced in Kain's Quest: Yes, Madam (2017)
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 31 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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